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| <nettime> Torygraph: The Snowden privacy panic has spread to medical research |
<http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/technology/marthagilltech/100012335/the-snowden-privacy-panic-has-spread-to-medical-research-this-is-a-problem/>
The Snowden privacy panic has spread to medical research.
This is a problem
Martha Gill
Martha Gill is a former staff writer for the New Statesman who specialises in
neuroscience and society.
By Martha Gill Science Last updated: February 7th, 2014
Since the Snowden revelations everyone has been panicking about
privacy. Google, Twitter, Facebook and Yahoo are racing to show users
how well they can protect their data. Government contractors are
double-scrutinising new hires and encrypting everything in sight. But
there's about to be one cautious move too many, and it's a serious
threat to medical research.
The European Parliament is proposing a new law which will effectively
illegalise a NHS database of patient records, along with many large
research projects. The idea had been kicking around for a while, but
progress ground to a halt last year. After Snowden though, the
kicking enthusiastically returned.
The idea is that we should have to get specific patient consent for
every possible use of their data. (Right now you only need general
consent, as long as it's all anonymous.. This may sound fair enough -
but it makes building large databases of patient information almost
impossible.
Laws for patient confidentiality vary from country to country, but one
thing everyone's always agreed on is the importance of disease
registries. These vast collections of patient data - used in cancer,
Alzheimer's, and you-name-it research - would be effectively dismantled
under the new laws.
I've written before about the advantages of making patient data
more available. There are some trials you just can't use volunteers for
- such as those with pregnant women and children. We need to know what
side effects drugs can have on these groups, but it's too dangerous to
experiment on them. Patient data is an vital subsidy.
In fact there are so many disadvantages to the new initiative that it's
astonishing it's still a runner. According to documents by NHS
officials it would cost the taxpayer over GBP50 million. There are about
70 important studies last year that it would now make impossible.
Europe's contribution to global research - such as the much lauded
Human Brain Project - would dwindle.
This has happened once before, too. In the 1980s, a new law was
introduced in Hamburg. You couldn't stick someone's details in a cancer
registry without their consent. Soon, Hamburg no longer had enough
samples to make their data representative. They were told they could no
longer submit it to the international databases and the cancer
registry, which had been building for 50 years, broke down. Realising
their mistake, Hamburg eventually revoked the law. Lesson learned?
Apparently not.
The irony is that getting to use patient data is already like going
through security at an airport. There are the legal controls, and there
are the technological controls. Researchers must also seek approval
from an ethics committee, who review the risks and the benefits of the
research. Large penalties are in place for misuse.
According to those in the research world, the problem in the European
Parliament right now is ignorance about the safeguards already in
place, mixed with Snowden paranoia. But in this case the paranoia is
sorely misplaced. Time to calm down a bit.
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